As part of its commitment to intercultural artistic initiatives, The Dance Center of Columbia College Chicago presents a collaboration between New York-based Japanese choreographer Kota Yamazaki and dancers from Africa and the U.S. Performances are tonight, September 27–29 at The Dance Center, 1306 S. Michigan Ave., Chicago.
Kota Yamazaki and his company Fluid hug-hug are collaborating with two dancers from Senegal and Ethiopia and four American and Japanese-American dancers on (glowing), a new work exploring Japanese aesthetics of shadow and darkness. To develop the choreography, Yamazaki finds inspiration in the classic 1933 essay "In Praise of Shadows" by Jun'ichiro Tanizaki, who focused on the cultural dichotomy of East and West. Yamazaki instead finds an affinity between Japanese and African artistry, attempting to bridge the "fire and ice" of the angular, asymmetrical and slow-moving Japanese movement form butoh with the rhythmic, exuberant, joyful and sensuous style of African dance. Collaborators include American architect/poet Robert Kocik and Japanese composer Kohji Setoh.Videos